Bond Market

Investment themes so far in 2026

The first two months of 2026 are done. With all the noise around AI, recent hand-wringing over private credit and – one month ago – jousting over Greenland and a bond market blow-up in Japan, it’s easy to miss the forest for the trees. So this post does something very simple. It compares how markets did in all of 2025 to how they did in the first two months of 2026. The picture that emerges is very clear. As far as the Dollar and precious metals go, the first two months of 2026 look very much like 2025, except that we’re on steroids. That’s easy to miss because precious metals had such a crazy spike and subsequent sell-off in January, yet they’re still up massively so far this year. The debasement trade is therefore still very much in the driver’s seat, except that it’s being amplified by an even weaker Dollar.

The single biggest difference from 2025 is that the S&P 500 is flat so far this year, which brings to a halt its rise throughout last year. But – strictly speaking – the S&P 500 has been flat since the end of September, so the fact that US equities have run out of steam isn’t something that’s “new” to 2026.

The table above shows how the Dollar, the S&P 500, precious metals and bitcoin have done during all of last year and so far in 2026. For the Dollar, I show it’s performance on a broad basis versus 26 countries as well as against the G10 and emerging markets (EM). The G10 index consists of seven countries, while the EM index consists of 19.

Overall, when you annualize the Dollar fall we’ve seen so far in January and February, we’re essentially on par with last year. The composition of Dollar weakness is shifting though. We’re now getting more Dollar weakness versus EM, while the Dollar is a bit more resilient against the G10. Markets continue to see “debasement” as less of a US-specific phenomenon and more about the G10 overall. That makes sense in my mind, since so many countries are in worse shape than the US when it comes to fiscal policy.

On an annualized basis, the rally in precious metals prices is accelerating in 2026. The crazy spike and subsequent sell-off in January obscure this – as the chart above shows – but precious metals are all up massively in 2025. The debasement trade, of which the rise in precious metals is just one manifestation, looks like it’s picking up speed.

The single biggest difference from 2025 is the fact that the stock market looks like it’s run out of steam, but – technically – the S&P 500 has been flatlining since the start of the fourth quarter, so this really isn’t a new trend. If bitcoin was out of favor as a safe haven in 2025, that’s even more true now. Overall, 2026 looks like a continuation of last year, except that we’re on steroids.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button